Bradbury

Bradbury was a colony of England founded in 1585 in present-day Uruguay during the Anglo-Spanish War.

History
Bradbury was named for a town in County Durham, northern England, and it was settled by a handful of Protestant English colonists in 1585 at the start of the Anglo-Spanish War. The settlers built twenty manor houses to support a population of up to 200 people, and the settlers would go on to build farms, mine silver, and cut down trees, increasing their supplies of food, currency, and wood. Later, a force of English longbowmen and musketeers left the town to attack the Spanish Empire's settlement of San Felipe de Salamanca, with their explorer as their leader. The victory over the Spanish allowed for the development of the settlement, but it would later be abandoned due to the increasing number of Spanish colonies in the region and the end of the war in 1604.